On 5.10.2016 11:02, nicholas cunliffe wrote:
agree in principle, and this is not the focus of the thread... but from trail and error it appears most editors etc do use kde default configs, they are a pain to start screwing around with for the uninitiated, and there should in general be more awareness over color design choices.
OK, makes sense. Then we might start summarizing "what exactly" we need to do to switch an installed system into something better-accessible for low-vision people. A simple, but clever script, maintained by some new project might help. I can't promise that we could maintain all that ourselves - depends on how much changes need to be done. But I can promise, that e.g., when you start Installer with SOME_NEW_OPTION in Linuxrc (or you you select that from menu), Installer would automatically call that script at the end of the installation (or something similar).
Most of the more configurable terminal emulators have settings that allow this to be easily changed, so its far less of a issue then say the installer where the user has no ability to customise the colors of anything. To that point a guide in a wiki showing how to set these config files up may be a better option.
Thanks Simon, I did not think about this before and it's indeed a great idea. Thanks! Lukas -- Lukas Ocilka, Systems Management (Yast) Team Leader SLE Department, SUSE Linux Sent from my openSUSE Tumbleweed https://en.opensuse.org/Portal:Tumbleweed -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-factory+owner@opensuse.org